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A lack of cultural integration is often blamed for hindering immigrant families’ economic progression. This paper explores whether there are in fact long-term consequences by investigating intergenerational effects of parental ethnic identity on the next generation’s human capital accumulation. Results based on longitudinal data from the German Socio-Economic Panel (SOEP) indicate a positive role of ...
In:
Journal of Population Economics
28 (2015), 4, 965-1004
| Simone Schüller
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The 9/11 terror attacks are likely to have induced an increase in anti-immigrant and anti-foreigner sentiments, not only among US residents but also beyond US borders. Using unique longitudinal data from the German Socio-Economic Panel and exploiting exogenous variation in interview timing throughout 2001, I find that the 9/11 events caused an immediate shift of around 40 percent of one within-standard ...
In:
Kyklos
69 (2016), 4, 604-632
| Simone Schüller
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Compulsory military service is a uniformed life event disrupting the lives of young men (and sometimes women) in countries with conscription. Consequently, the development of personality and subjective well-being during service was investigated using representative population data from the German Socio-Economic Panel. In line with previous findings, men who chose military service revealed descriptively ...
Berlin:
DIW Berlin,
2015,
(SOEPpapers 751)
| Johannes Schult, Jörn R. Sparfeldt
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In:
Johannes Schwarze, Friedrich Buttler, Gert G. Wagner ,
Labour Market Dynamics in Present Day Germany
Frankfurt/M. - New York: Campus
165-186
| Erika Schulz, Ellen Kirner
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While the course and the determinants of fertility behaviour have been investigated intensively, the monetary consequences of birth have hardly been considered empirically to date. Therefore, this paper focuses on the short-term (equivalent) household income changes around the time of births in a longitudinal perspective and examines them for their causes. For the analyses of the longitudinal data ...
In:
Comparative Population Studies - Zeitschrift für Bevölkerungswissenschaft
35 (2010), 1, 65-84
| Alexander Schulze
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Expectile regression is a topic which became popular in the last years. It includes ordinary mean regression as special case but is more general as it offers the possibility to also model non-central parts of a distribution. Semi-parametric expectile models have recently been developed and it is easy to perform flexible expectile estimation with modern software like R. We extend the model class by ...
In:
Statistics and Computing
27 (2017), 1, 271-282
| Linda Schulze Waltrup, Göran Kauermann
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This paper examines the impact of fixed-term employment on the affective and cognitive well-being of employees operationalized by the subjective frequency of the basic emotions of happiness, sadness, fear and anger as well as life satisfaction. Longitudinal effects were analysed across 10 waves of sampling from the Socio-Economic Panel, an annual representative survey in Germany. Random effects within ...
In:
Journal of Happiness Studies
21 (2020), 7, 2557-2582
| Paul Schumann, Lars Kuchinke
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This book investigates both the causes and effects of transnational activities among immigrants in relation to their integration into the receiving society. It uses large scale, representative data about first and second generation immigrants in Germany. It develops a formal theoretical model, which explains both transnational involvement and paths of immigrant integration. Important questions are ...
Cham:
Springer International Publishing,
2014,
| Reinhard Schunck
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Objective. Discrimination is an important determinant of health, and its experience may contribute to the emergence of health inequalities between immigrants and nonimmigrants. We examine pathways between perceived discrimination and health among immigrants in Germany: (1) whether perceptions of discrimination predict selfreported mental and physical health (SF-12), or (2) whether poor mental and physical ...
In:
Ethnicity & Health
20 (2015), 5, 493-510
| Reinhard Schunck, Katharina Reiss, Oliver Razum
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Background: This study investigates possible mechanisms that can explain the association between unemployment and smoking, that is a) unemployment increases smoking probability (causation), b) smoking increases the probability to become unemployed (selection), and c) differences in both smoking and unemployment probabilities trace back to differences in socio-economic position (common cause). Methods: ...
Berlin:
DIW Berlin,
2012,
(SOEPpapers 491)
| Reinhard Schunck, Benedikt G. Rogge